One of my recent client programming projects (hire me here) was to help a company migrate all customers, cards, plans, and subscriptions from one Stripe account to another as a result of an acquisition. I hadn’t needed to do anything like this in the past and I ended up fumbling my way through a few of the steps. So, I thought it worth the effort to jot down the process.

Here is a graphic of the overall process with notes to follow below.

I made some notes along the way during this project. Using the numbers above, here is the process step-by-step and some things you’ll want to keep in mind before you begin.

Send an email to support@stripe.com to request Customer and Card migration from Account A to Account B.

Remember that both accounts need to be activated

Stripe cannot transfer live accounts into test accounts (a shame)

Stripe transfers Customer and Card information from Account A to Account B

Stripe cannot “schedule” this transfer for an exact date or time

Stripe can run the migration more than once should new Customers be added

Customer IDs are retained from one account to another

Card IDs cannot be retained

Stripe will not migrate Plans or Subscriptions

Transfer Plans from Account A to Account B

Retain all plan information (recommended)

The most crucial piece to keep the same is plan_id

You may want to make adjustments to “Statement Description” at this time if the business name has changed

Transfer Active Subscriptions from Account A to Account B

There is no need to transfer cancelled or inactive accounts

During the transfer, request Subscription on Account A to cancel at period end

Create a new Subscription on Account B based on plan_id, using billing_cycle_anchor will allow the Subscription on Account B to begin the moment the Subscription on Account A is cancelled

(not in graphic) Verify all Plan and Subscription information has been moved

Whether you’re using Stripe’s excellent API to migrate your Plans and Subscriptions or doing it manually via their admin the process is basically the same. The customer I was working with had nearly 5,000 customers and over 1,000 active Subscriptions on 4 Plans. So writing a script to do this saved huge amounts of time.

How did I write the code? Depending on your exact needs and your familiarity in different languages you may want to find a completely different approach to the one I took. However, I’m a PHP guy, this is what I did.

My modifications to Nyalex’s script were fairly minimal but vital. Since he hadn’t used the scripts in some time they fell out-of-date with Stripe’s latest API version. So I had to make some subtle updates to account for those. Also, the client was using Easy Digital Downloads, a WordPress ecommerce plugin, as their backend so I had to write a few SQL queries to update the Subscription IDs in EDD’s customer table as the process ran. I plan on writing a Pull Request for Nyalex so that I can help keep his set of scripts up-to-date for future uses.

There were, of course, a few hiccups when running the scripts.

First, the client’s server would time out if I tried to process all 4,800 accounts at once. Each account creates several Stripe API calls (about 7) so even with Stripe’s limit of 100 accounts at-a-time that is still a hefty 700 API calls. So understandably I had to find the right number that the server’s setup could handle without choking. I also slimmed down the number of API calls slightly from the default. I did this by creating some mock API calls for the cancel and create Subscription calls and let the script run a few times until I found the right number. For this particular client it was 20 accounts at a time being processed. Which meant the script ran over 200 times to complete the process. Because I was purposefully doing this manually, rather than setting up the script to run end-over-end, this process took a little over an hour.

Second, prior to creating those mock calls I accidentally duplicated a few subscriptions for 23 accounts and needed to go back and manually cancel them all before re-running the script. I recommend not doing this. Again, it is a drawback that Stripe cannot migrate live Accounts as Test accounts so that you can do test runs on this sort of thing but it is understandable.

And, lastly, I didn’t properly create a log file for all of the transfers as they were done so I had to manually save the output of Nyalex’s script to a text file. I think I’d like to update the scripts to create a log file of old subscription ID, customer email address, and new subscription ID at the very least. This would have saved me a lot of time and would give me a “back up” of sorts should any customers have been missed. Also, since the scripts only attempt to migrate active Subscriptions it would have been nice to extend the scripts to log inactive Customers too just as a double-check that those Customers were looked at.

Overall this was an interesting project to take on and I’m hoping that my knowledge from this project will get reused in the future. If you need to migrate from one Stripe account to another please reach out.